Since the iTunes Store launched in 2003, digital music sales have been viewed as the music industry’s saving grace in the face of declining physical album sales and rampant online piracy. Now, with a deluge of music streaming

Spotify, the on-demand music streaming service, has been under increasing fire from musicians who say it’s hurting the record industry. Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke pulled some of his solo work from the service earlier this year

Pandora remains the king of Internet radio for now. The online music service’s position atop the sector has been in question ever since Apple announced it was launching a direct competitor, but Pandora has fended off iTunes

Spotify, the fast-growing music-streaming service, has had an increasingly vocal contingent of musicians questioning whether its business model benefits the music industry as a whole. Now a record label is joining the mix, accusing Spotify of copyright infringement because of the way it handles playlists.

The fast-growing music-streaming service Spotify received a very public put-down on Sunday when singer Thom Yorke and producer Nigel Godrich, members of the band Atoms for Peace, announced via Twitter that their music would be

Jay Z instantly became the biggest artist to launch an album with an app last week with “Magna Carta Holy Grail.” But album apps have actually been around for a few years and could become a common way to acquire music in the future